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Assessment of tolerance induction by <i>Origanum vulgare</i> L. essential oil or carvacrol in <i>Pseudomonas aeruginosa</i> cultivated in a meat-based broth and in a meat model
12
Citations
28
References
2014
Year
Antimicrobial SusceptibilityMicrobial ContaminationViable Cell CountsAntimicrobial ResistanceFood MicrobiologyMeat ModelMeat-based BrothTolerance InductionMicrobiologyDirect ToleranceFoodborne HazardMedicineMeat ScienceFood SafetyHealth Sciences
This study assessed the efficacy of Origanum vulgare L. essential oil (OVEO) and carvacrol in inhibiting the growth of Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 9027, as well as the development of direct tolerance and cross-tolerance when this bacterium was challenged with sublethal amounts of these substances in a meat-based broth and in a meat model. OVEO and carvacrol at their minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs), 1/2 MIC and 1/4 MIC decreased the viable cell counts of P. aeruginosa in meat-based broth. Direct tolerance or cross-tolerance was not induced after exposure of the assayed bacterial strain to sublethal amounts of OVEO or carvacrol in meat-based broth and in an artificially contaminated ground beef. Bacterial cells progressively subcultured in meat-based broth with increasing amounts of the tested substances survived up to the MIC of OVEO and to 1/2 MIC of carvacrol. The results reveal a lack of induction of tolerance in P. aeruginosa by exposure to OVEO or carvacrol in meat-based broth and in a meat model.
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